CYPERACE^E. ( SEDGE FAMILY.) '193 



10. C. nciliniiiatus, Torr. Slender (3'- 12' high) ; spikes ovate ^com- 

 ing oblong, 1 6 - 30-flowered, pale, collected in simple or compound heads ; scales 

 Mseurely 3-nerced, their short acute tips somewhat spreading ; achenium oblong, 

 pointed at both ends. Low ground, Illinois and westward. 



* * * Root perennial: stamen only 1 : spikes short and flat, ovate and oblong, crowd- 

 ed in close globular heads ; the joints of the axis not margined. 



11. C. Vii'ens, Michx. Culm (1 -4 high) either sharply or obtusely 

 triangular ; leaves and involucre very long, keeled ; umbel compound, many- 

 rayed ; achenium oblong or linear, to | the length of the narrow oblong acut- 

 ish scale. (C. vegetus, Torr.} Wet places, Virginia and southward. Head* 

 of spikes grcea, turning tawny. 



* * w * Root perennial: rootstocks creeping, or tuberous: stamens 3. 



-*- S]>ikes flat, closely flowered, ovate-oblong or becoming broadly linear, 3 - 5 at tht 



end of each ray of the compound umbel. 



12. C. ilentatus, Torr. Culm slender (6'- 12' high) ; umbel 4-7-rayed; 

 spikes 6 - 30-flo\vered ; scales strongly keeled, and with abruptly sharp-pointed 

 slightly spreading tips, reddish-brown on the sides, green on the back ; achenium 

 obovate, sharply triangular. Sandy swamps, Massachusetts to Virginia, and 

 southward. Aug Spikes 2"- 5" long, sometimes changing into leafy tufts. 

 - H- Spikes flat, closely flowered, linear ('-!' long), loosely spiked along the upper 



part of the rays of the open umbel : rootstocks slender, creeping extensively, and 

 bearing small nut-like tubers. 



13. C. 1'otiindus, L., var. Hydra. (NUT-GRASS.) Culm slender 

 (- 1^ high), longer than the leaves; umbel simple or slightly compound, 

 about equalling the involucre; the few rays each bearing 4 - 9 dark chestnut- 

 purple 1 2 - 40-fl owered acute spikes ; scales ovate, closely appressetl, nerveless except 

 on the green keel. (C. Hydra, Michx.) Sandy fields, Virginia and south- 

 ward : probably an immigrant from farther south. Excessively troublesome tc 

 planters. (Eu.) 



14. C. pliyiimtdtles, Muhl. Culm (l-2% high) equalling the leaves; 

 umbel often compound, 4- 7-rayed, much shorter than the long involucre ; spikes 

 numerous, lit/lit chestnut or straw-color, acutish, 12 30-flowered; scales oblong, nar- 

 rowly scarious-margined, nerved, the acutish tips rather loose ; achenium oblong. 

 (C. repens, EU.) Low grounds, along rivers, &c., Vermont to Michigan, Illi- 

 nois, and common southward. Aug. Tubers small, at the end of very slender 

 rootstocks : by these the plant multiplies rapidly, and becomes a pest. 

 --- Spikes flattish. rather loosely flowered, greenish, lance-linear, capitate-clua* 



tered (except in Nc. 15) ; the convex ovate scales many-nerved, only J or 4 longer 

 than the triangular achenium: culms tufted from hard tuberiferous rootstocks. 



15. C. Scliwciiibtzii, Torr. Culm rough on the angles (1- 2 high) ; 

 leaves linear; umbel simple, 4-8-rayed; spikes crowded at the upper part of the 

 mostly elongated rays, erect, loosely 6 - 9-flowered, a bristly bract at the base of 

 each ; scales awl-pointed, scarcely longer than the ovate achenium ; joints of the 

 axis narrowly winged. Dry sandy shores, &c., Lake Ontario, New York, to 

 Illinois and northwestward. Aug. Spikes %'-%' long: the scales large i& 

 proportion. 



